This invention relates to the field of glass deck surrounds generally wherein sheets of glass are mounted to a deck between vertical posts and without the need for top or bottom supports along the top and bottom edges of the sheets of glass, and in particular to a selectively articulating post and post system for topless and bottomless glass sheet deck surrounds.
It is now well known to provide deck surrounds using sheets of 10 mil (⅜ inch) sheets of glass mounted between vertically supporting posts so that upper and lower rails on the upper and lower edges of the sheets of glass are not required. The problem in the prior art was that when it was needed to mount the sheets of glass on either side of one of the vertical posts at other than ninety degrees or one hundred eighty degrees between the sheets, being the pre-fabricated orientations conventional found in such posts, in the past, this meant that each post had to be custom built by welding a supporting channel at the required angle onto a solid post.
In the prior art pf framing systems generally, applicant is aware of U.S. Pat. No. 5,291,708 which issued Mar. 8, 1994 to Johnson for a Modular Framing System. Johnson discloses a modular framing system having a plurality of framing units between which panels may be retained by their lower corner edges. Each framing unit includes a body having a plurality of circumferentially spaced receiving chambers having semi-circular configuration and vertically tapered openings. A chamber rod on a panel retainer connects to the body by lowering into one of the receiving chambers to connect the panel retainer to the body through the openings. The chamber rod and panel may be rotated to the desired angular position with respect to the body. Because of the tapered opening, which is open wider at the upper end of the body and narrower at the bottom end, firstly, the range of angular motion may be restricted as compared to if the opening had parallel edges spaced apart by the amount of the widest opening, and secondly, a cap may advantageously be provided having downward projections registering with apertures in the chamber rods so as to counter the tendency, aggravated by the tapered opening, of the chamber rods and panel retainers to rotate outward from the main body.
Applicant is also aware of U.S. Pat. No. 5,626,434 which issued May 6, 1997 to Cook for a Connector for Variable-Curvatures Space Frame Structural System. Cook teaches a space frame structural system wherein the ends of elongated frame members have headed ends which fit into matching recesses in a connector joint within a connector having three, disk-like parts nestled one on top of the other.
Applicant is also aware of U.S. Pat. No. 6,397,537 which issued Jun. 4, 2002 to Auer et al. for a Partition Wall, Auer et al. disclosing the use of connecting elements to connect wall elements to a column wherein the column has grooves along its periphery for interacting with the connecting elements and the wall element has a connection profile having a groove on an edge side bordering the column for receiving the connecting element, the grooves providing for rotation of the connecting element about the longitudinal axis of the groove.
In the present invention, the vertical edges of the sheets of glass are held within elongate cylindrical gaskets which are journalled length-wise into and along vertical channels, formed within the sides of the vertical post. The channels are semi-circular in horizontal cross section and characterized herein as cylindrical, and are sized for a snug mating fit with the cylindrical gasket so that a sheet of glass supported in a slot in the gasket may pivot relative to the post, for example by up to approximately forty-five degrees for each channel. Thus the vertical edges of the sheets of glass are maintained within the vertical post in a vertical hinge by the use of the elongate gasket mounted on the vertical edge of the sheet of glass providing a snug rotatable fit within the channel when the edge of glass and the gasket are mounted in the vertical channel in the vertical post so as to extend the slot opening and sheet of glass through the parallel side edges of the opening into the channel.
In a further embodiment, a space may be provided between the vertical edge of the sheet of glass and the interior-most surface of the slot into which the edge of the glass is fitted so as to provide a vertical pocket into which may be mounted a light strip to thereby illuminate across the sheet of glass from the edge of the sheet.
In summary, the articulating post system according to one aspect of the present invention may be characterized as including at least one elongate post housing, each post housing having at least one channel extending between opposite ends of the post housing so as to extend substantially entirely from one end to an opposite second end of the post housing, and at least one rigid cylindrical gasket mountable into snug rotational engagement within and along substantially the entire length of the at least one channel. Each gasket may be selectively rotated about a longitudinally extending centroidal axis of its corresponding channel whereby, when the gasket is mounted within the channel, the gasket is selectively angularly rotatable relative to the post housing about the centroidal axis.
Each gasket has a glass-receiving slot formed therein and extending along substantially the entire length of the gasket parallel to a longitudinal axis of the gasket, for example an axis co-axial with the centroidal axis. The glass-receiving slot is sized so as to snugly receive along substantially the entire length of the gasket a corresponding entire edge of a sheet of glass in snug mating engagement therein and therealong.
Each of the channels has an elongate opening along substantially the entire length of the gasket and includes opposed facing gasket retaining flanges having parallel edges extending along the opening from opposite sides of the opening to thereby retain the corresponding gaskets in the channels. The gasket is not retained in its corresponding channel by anything other than the gasket retaining flanges. In particular, no gasket-retaining cap such as in the above-noted Johnson '708 United States patent is required.
The housing may include only a single channel and with the corresponding gasket thereby forms an end post. The housing may alternatively include a pair of channels and with a pair of corresponding gaskets thereby forms a post chosen from the group comprising, that is, which is either an in-line post, or a corner post. Where the channels are parallel and oppositely disposed to one another on the housing the post is an in-line post. Where the pair of the channels are parallel and adjacent to one another in the housing and disposed substantially orthogonally relative to one another, the post is a corner post.
Advantageously, the flanges are elongate continuous lips formed in opposed facing relation to thereby define the opening therebetween, and wherein each gasket has a diameter in lateral cross section which is larger than a width of the opening. Preferably each channel is formed as a cylindrical socket.
Each gasket may further include at least one resilient lining member such as resilient protrusions, ribs, bumps, etc. mounted within the slot for resilient mating against the edge of the glass sheet when the edge of the glass sheet is mounted in the slot.
a is, in transverse section, the corner post of
b is the cross section of
c is the cross section of
The articulating post 10 and post system described herein in four alternative embodiments, which are not intended to be limiting, provide for accommodating the support of topless and bottomless glass sheets 12 on, again without intending to be limiting, balconies, patios, pools, retaining walls, mezzanines, stairs, etc., herein collectively referred to as decks, so that the posts in combination may accommodate any particular angle required so as to provide a deck surround using the glass sheets 12.
In the prior art, conventional deck surround posts were fabricated using two and one half inch or two inch square tubes with one inch by one inch aluminum channels which were welded together. In the present invention, a poly vinyl chloride (PVC) gasket 14 snugly and rotatably mates into a corresponding channel 16 defined by cylindrical channel walls 16b extending the vertical length the post housing extrusion 18. Gasket 14 and channel 16 are semi-circular in horizontal cross section, that is in cross section transversely across, so as to be orthogonal to, the longitudinal axes A and B respectively of gasket 14 and channel 16 where axes A and B are co-axial axes of rotation. Gasket 14 has a cross sectional radius orthogonal to axis A. Axis B is spaced radially inwardly from the outer periphery of the channel 16 by a distance less than the radius r1. Radius r1 is substantially equal to radius r2 of channel 16. Thus, each of channels 16 also includes a longitudinal opening in the outer facing periphery of the channel so as to accommodate angular rotation of gasket 14 about the axes of rotation when the edge of a sheet of glass is fitted in the gasket through the opening in the channel.
Thus with gasket 14 snugly journalled in and along channel 16, gasket 14 may be rotated in direction C better seen in the progression illustrated in
Thus with sheet 12 mounted fully into slot 20 in direction D formed within and along the length of gasket 14, so as to be supported within slot 20 by for example flexible PVC ribs, pads, or other supporting linings or protrusions 22, and with gasket 14 installed into channel 16, glass sheet 12 may be rotated about the coaxial axes of rotation A, B to adjust the angular orientation of glass sheet 12 and gasket 14 relative to channel and post housing extrusion 18 to the required angular relationship to allow the opposite edge of the glass sheet to be correspondingly installed into an opposed facing gasket 14 itself mounted into a corresponding channel 16 in a corresponding post housing extrusion 18 at the opposite end of the sheet of glass.
Thus as seen in
Thus as seen in
In a further embodiment of post housing extrusion 18, as seen in
Thus as seen in the progression of
As seen in
In one embodiment of the present invention, an elongate light strip such as for example sold commercially under the trade-name Flatlite™ by E-Lite Technologies Inc of Trumbull Conn., U.S.A. forms an electro luminescent light strip 32 (see www.e-lite.com) which may be conveniently fitted into linear pocket 30. Pocket 30 extends along the inner-most edge 12a of glass sheet 12 when inserted fully into slot 20 within gasket 14. The use of a light strip 32 along the length of linear pocket 30 so as to extend and illuminate along the length of edge 12a of glass sheet 12 illuminates the glass from that edge along and across the entire glass sheet 12 thereby providing soft edge illumination. Where the sheet is engraved, the edge lighting illuminates the engraving for decorative and safety purposes.
As will be apparent to those skilled in the art in the light of the foregoing disclosure, many alterations and modifications are possible in the practice of this invention without departing from the spirit or scope thereof.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/924,439 filed May 15, 2007 entitled Articulating Post for a Topless and Bottomless Glass Post System.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA2008/000922 | 5/15/2008 | WO | 00 | 11/13/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60924439 | May 2007 | US |